19 lies and counting – updated*

 

Christian Today reports…

“A former leading light in the Christian “Quiverfull” movement made famous by the Duggar family, and recently named Atheist of the Year, has opened up about her experiences in the fundamental Christian community.

Vyckie Garrison, who founded No Longer Quivering to tell the story of her exit from the Quiverfull movement and to help women seeking to recover from what she describes as “spiritual abuse”, said hers had been one of many fundamentalist families who take very seriously the idea that children are a blessing from the Lord, using a passage from the Psalms.

But they rarely referred to themselves by that name so often people who had never heard of the movement might be unaware that close relatives or friends were deeply involved. “It’s very idealistic, very much this head trip of a godly happy family serving the word and doing things biblically,” she told an atheist podcast at the American atheist convention in Memphis, Tennessee.

Garrison said she was “speechless” to receive the award of American Atheist of the Year.

Quiverfull has become well known because of the “19 Kids and Counting” reality TV show about the Duggar family, although the family do not describe themselves as belonging to the movement. Last month the show was suspended after the eldest son, Josh, apologised in the wake of reports that he had molested several underage girls as a teenager.

Ms Garrison said she had never planned to have a large family, and in fact had never even wanted children. In addition, she said she is an introvert and likes to be alone. But she became pregnant and after meeting and marrying her Christian husband, and went on to have six more children while in the Quiverfull movement. She said she gradually progressed towards fundamentalism, especially during the latter part of her life as a Christian.

She said when she looked into the scriptures to explore how God wanted her to model a marriage, she found a model based on patriarchy. “These families are just contorting themselves in their relationships to try and fit something,” she said. It did not matter if the man was not a natural leader type, or had no desire to dominate his wife.

Even capable, professional women in the movement had to step back, be subservient and let their husband do the leading. The archetype family was the Duggar family, Garrison added.

She said Quiverfull was basically an expression of the pro-life movement. She had a baby and then felt she had to trust in God and be a good Christian mother so her daughter would have a better life than she had. At one point she even decided her fundamentalist Baptist church was too liberal and “wishy-washy” so left that church and founded a home church with like-minded families who all home-schooled their children. They called it a “biblical” church. “We were the true Christians,” she said.

Garrison said she was committed to doing whatever was necessary to make sure her children had a good life, which was why things began to change.

“After a while I started to notice my kids were not thriving in that environment,” she explained. They were not allowed to mix with public school children, and were told from birth that this was their life and that God had a plan for them. “When I saw how unhappy my children were, my brain was scrambling, it just did not compute.”

At age 37, she decided to find her father, who she had never known, so she could “share the good news” – she found him in a Baptist church in Arkansas. “When I met him he was just so proud,” Garrison recalls. She had been named Nebraska family of the year because of the pro-life pro-family newspaper she published.

Her father introduced her to an uncle with a warning that he was an atheist. She found she really liked him, and tried to justify her lifestyle without appealing to the Bible. “The more I tried to justify it I had to find reasons other than saying, ‘Thus sayeth the Lord’,” she said.

Eventually she concluded that if it wasn’t for the Bible, nothing could justify the way she lived.

Garrison therefore decided that on its own, it was “crazy”. She said that as she left, it was as if the whole world came crashing down. She had felt she had had a rock-solid foundation to her faith. “Everything in my life was centred around Jesus.” Even their income came from the Christian family newspaper, but she got to the point where she realised she did not believe in enough of it to call herself a Christian.

“It was a big crashing mess,” she said. She got divorced, “the Bible says God hates divorce. Now that I didn’t believe in the Bible it was like, ‘goodbye’,” and put her children into the public school system. Then she said she started to feel happy, and started to see her children come alive. “They had an opportunity to explore who they are, not what God wanted for their lives but who they wanted to be.” Her youngest is now 12 and her oldest, 29.

She said she had herself been raised in a chaotic home and had wanted something solid, a formula by which to live and raise her family. It did not take years to change. Once her belief in God had disappeared, it was “like a house of cards”, everything crumbled, Garrison said. Although she tried, she could not salvage anything of her original faith, even in feminist spirituality or liberal Christianity.

She confessed that one of the things she loves to do now is troll Christians, or “true believers” on Twitter.”

From http://www.christiantoday.com/article/atheist.of.the.year.tells.of.exit.from.fundamentalist.quiverfall.movement/55325.htm

 

18 thoughts on “19 lies and counting – updated*

  1. “Who’s the tough guy?”
    I thought you were!
    Lol

    “There’s plenty of sites that blame non-believers and gays for all the ills of the world.”
    Really? Can you give me the links?

    “Maybe you need to visit them if you can’t handle it.”
    Can’t handle what? These articles?
    Lol no probs!
    Looks like you can’t handle my comments…..
    Lol

    Like

  2. Who’s the tough guy?

    There’s plenty of sites that blame non-believers and gays for all the ills of the world.

    Maybe you need to visit them if you can’t handle it.

    Like

  3. Not worked up.
    I can handle it.
    If Lance wants to ban me, he can do so. It’s his site. Until then I’ll comment.
    Simple.
    Now, after you’ve finished with Driscoll, Houston, the Duggars, go get Isis tough guy!

    Like

  4. Why are you getting yourself so worked up over this? You should be getting worked up over real issues like ISIS killing Christians. Not over some guy who hates gays and had it off with this sisters.

    Oh the injustice…

    If you can’t handle Christians being caught out being dickheads in public then don’t come to this site.

    You should be whinging to Lance.

    Like

  5. They all acknowledge that it happened.
    What are you talking about?

    what kind of nasty person takes glee in news like that?

    The boy did wrong when he was a minor ten years ago.

    Man, ex-Christians are so judgemental.
    Between the Hillsong Conference and a reality show, you sure are busy attacking and condemning.
    How do you sleep at night?

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  6. Jimmy Saville and that kid are completely different cases.
    Honestly, if you can’t see that then nobody in law or psychology could have a reasonable discussion with you.

    Like

  7. You twrite cr@p.

    Jimmy Saville didn’t want anyone to know about his private life either. So don’t talk about it.

    They can try to keep it a secret. Which they did. The fact is they enjoyed all the trappings that came with being celebrities and being famous as a model ‘traditional’ family.

    They got found out which is what happens when you want to become famous.

    Stiff sh!t.

    Like

  8. Not everyone wants to go public with sexual matters.

    Do I have to explain everything?

    I thought your comprehension might have improved.

    And not every person who is on TV or the movies wants everything about their life to be discussed.

    Imitation game. Okay, I’ll watch it. I’m not in favor of castration.
    You are now being silly.

    And it think you are the one who is more into thinks up your alley.

    Like

  9. “If only people were as diligent in talking about the sexual history of famous homosexuals.”

    Yeah you’d like Imitation Game. WW2 hero Alan Turing is chemically castrated for being gay then kills himself.

    Thanks for solving the Enigma Code Alan but we can’t have gay heroes.

    Would be just up your alley.

    Like

  10. “Not everyone wants to go public.”

    By making their own reality TV show and capitalising on their fame with interviews for magazines?

    Meh.

    Look what’s happening to Bill Cosby.

    If you want to be famous your past will catch up with you.

    Like

  11. “Nothing like traditional family values…..like abusing your sisters.”

    And everyone agrees his actions were not in line with family values.
    Obviously.

    Like

  12. That’s a bit low Bones….

    I see a complete difference between
    an adult priest, teacher, policeman or anyone molesting kids and a 16 yr old.

    Not everyone wants to go public.

    It’s obvious this family is being attacked because of their values.

    I’d never heard of them before now and I don’t go along with all they say and do.

    But if every adult male or female had to resign a position because they had something bad in their youth, 10% of adults might have to be shamed.

    Not sure if you’ve had anything to do with counselling or psychology or spoken with people in these situations but not every girl is happy about events like that with a brother being shouted from the rooftops.

    And it wouldn’t matter to me if the parents in this case were Buddhists, Muslims, transgender or bisexual Calvinists.

    Like

  13. Nothing like traditional family values…..like abusing your sisters.

    I do believe Q wants abuse kept secret.

    Q= Cardinal Pell

    Like

  14. If only people were as diligent in talking about the sexual history of famous homosexuals.
    This kid gets savaged by the homosexual media (for obvious reasons) while in the other hand they want to put mayor on a stamp even though he was having sex with a 16 year old when he was 33.
    That kid grows up to commit suicide at 33 – but Milk the anti/Christian bigot is venerated . Hard to follow.

    Like

  15. lol @ Wazza.

    And Bones, I concur. I guess they didn’t think it would come out. I guess I need to give up my dream of a reality show too…..
    lol

    Like

  16. Turns out that the program they sent him away to was a friend of the family that had a house remodelling business. When he got back they took him to a State trooper who gave him a very stern talking to. A bit later this same state trooper was convicted of child porn offences and is now serving 56 years in jail.

    Liked by 1 person

  17. This was a long time ago and is better bring kept quiet.

    I don’t think this guy needs to have his whole life ruined over what he did at that age.

    Like

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